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COVID has forced us to adjust fundamental aspects of our lives with little warning and against a background of anxiety and uncertainty. However, while they test us, such dislocative events can also foster innovation and unlock opportunities.
Whether their focus is enterprise-wide, solutions-oriented, strategic or technical, the role of the architect in modern delivery projects is to thrive in the face of change, whether incremental or more abrupt. Modern architectures, design thinking, and ways of working are key success factors for each and any digital transformation journey. Modern architecture is about enabling your IT landscape to evolve iteratively, managing change holistically, and stimulating innovation.
The impact of remote working on the modern architect has been far greater than merely redefining the ways that language, messaging, diagrams, and concepts are packaged and communicated. Agile has already forced that transformation to happen. ‘Just in time’ architecture cultivated by new ways of working has already been adopted by our architects and continues to be embraced. Their role as facilitator and influencer has already evolved. Now it is time for soft skills to be redefined.
How can architects prepare for future changes?
The path forward
The lessons of history are instructive. For instance, the deregulation of UK markets ushered in by the ‘Big Bang’ of 1986 prompted a fundamental change in working and professional practices. It required a plethora of technology-backed support mechanisms to be architected and developed to facilitate a seismic transformation. Crucially, it also triggered a change in the consulting architect’s language and toolset, and a variety of enterprise architecture frameworks were born during this decade: PRISM (1986), Zachman (1987) and NIST (1989).
We now find ourselves in a similar scenario, one that is at once immensely dislocative yet also rich with potential. As Albert Einstein noted: “In the middle of difficulty, lies opportunity”. History has shown that there is always a winning path. By continuously and holistically assessing the readiness of your architecture to accommodate change, you will be better placed to identify that path – and in that context, modern architecture has a primary role to play in defining the future.
This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author.
Ben O'Brien Managing Director at Jaywing
07 February
Steve Ponting Director at Software AG
Alex Kreger Founder & CEO at UXDA
Prakash Bhudia HOD – Product & Growth at Deriv
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